Reptile House
Format:Paperback
Publisher:BOA Editions, Limited
Published:25th Jun '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Galleys available: national mailing to key review/media outlets 4-5 months prior to publication. National print campaign: 100 finished books will be mailed to key review outlets, with emphasis on publications that have previously published McLean. Specifically targeting New England-based media, as well as Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, The New York Times Book Review, The New Yorker, Poets & Writers Magazine, The Rumpus, Huffington Post Poetry, etc. National advertising in Poets & Writers magazine, American Poet magazine, the Academy of American Poets newsletter, Rain Taxi, and Redactions. Spring announcements will be submitted to Publishers Weekly. Excerpts from two judges of the 2011 and 2012 Flannery O'Connor Prize. Extensive promotion through BOA's website and blog; Facebook (6,200+ contacts), Twitter (4,000 followers), Instagram, and Pinterest accounts; print and e-postcards; print and e-materials; and print and e-catalogs. Electronic postcard to announce publication will be sent to McLean's academic/library contacts, bookstore contacts, and literary bloggers. McLean will send an e-announcement to her personal email lists of several hundred, specifically targeting those interested in literary fiction. Electronic newsletter feature will be emailed to BOA's database of 3,000+ contacts. Attendance and possible author signing at AWP Conference in Minneapolis. Ebook will be available at the same time as print publication to maximize sales. Ebook ISBN will be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed. Publisher and author will be promoting both e and p through social media. Promotion through the author's email lists, Twitter (robinmclean0), Pinterest and Linkedin accounts, and website (robinmclean.net). Author is planning an extensive multi-city/state tour. She will try to schedule joint readings with other BOA authors, as well as with Jim Shepard (for his forthcoming novel The Book of Aaron, May 2015) and Rachel Glaser (for her forthcoming novel Pauline and Fran, Summer 2015, Harper Perennial). Author is considering hiring an additional publicist to assist with promotion and author tour plans.
With characters trapped by blind ambitions and toxic relationships, these stories probe the dark underbelly of human nature and want.The characters in these nine short stories abandon families, plot assassinations, nurse vendettas, tease, taunt, and terrorize. They retaliate for bad marriages, dream of weddings, and wait decades for lovers. How far will we go to escape to a better dream? What consequences must we face for hope and fantasy? Robin McLean's stories are strange, often disturbing and funny, and as full of foolishness and ugliness as they are of the wisdom and beauty all around us. Robin McLean holds an MFA from UMass Amherst. She teaches at Clark University and lives in Bristol, New Hampshire, and Sunderland, Massachusetts.
A Paris Review "Best Book of 2015" Winner of the BOA Short Fiction Prize "Like [Flannery] O'Connor's work, Reptile House is rife with moral ambiguity and extreme violence--elegantly written, abruptly erupting, and starkly moving--as well as other forms of human and inhuman darkness... But there is unadulterated joy in Reptile House, and it lies in the inventiveness of McLean's language. Her prose is energetic and lyrical without excising ugliness ... This skill with language makes possible the stories' portraits of human beings, so revealing in their unsentimental bleakness, and it is in this unique style that the worldhood of Reptile House emerges... To read Reptile House is to dwell in a broken, funny, frightening, possibly doomed world--a world that may help us to read and live in our own." --Kenyon Review "Characters struggle to control slivers of their fates in the nine stories of McLean's debut... McLean has a knack for stunning sentences that resonate with her characters' circumstances... [She] stages yearning and stasis with poignancy and wit." --Kirkus Reviews "McLean's debut collection of short stories moves seamlessly from adultery to kidnapping, from assassination plots to extreme geothermal events, all in a voice that is spare and darkly poetic... McLean's characters are lonely in their marriages, isolated from the world around them, and not generally given happy endings. What this book does offer, however, is strangely realistic glimpses into conflicts that are equal parts surreal and hyper-realistic, rendered by a voice that gracefully juxtaposes terse reportage and lyrical insight. The result is a taut volume that explores the fate of the dashed dreamer, offering charming insights into the untidy worlds of people who are not where they thought they'd be." --Publishers Weekly "I am still thinking about these stories, still turning those objects over in my head like the strange but stunning artifacts of someone else's life. And that, I suppose, is Reptile House's most impressive accomplishment: for better or worse, it is the kind of book that stays with you long after you've finished it, begging to be revisited over and over again." --Colorado Review "Upset runs rampant throughout McLean's debut work. McLean's surreal tales about ordinary characters deliver emotional truth in poetic language. Concrete and surreal, they spill beyond the conventional short story forms." --Common "Robin McLean writes in wonderful cascades of language. Her characters are carried along by those cascades, often unwittingly. Sometimes, as with the two young men in 'No Name Creek,' they are carried to a happy end. More often, they seem to be, like Lilibeth in 'Cold Snap,' overtaken by events beyond their control. Characters' own words, often inept or pathetic in light of their situations, offer ironic counterpoint. Much is laughable in these stories. Don't be deceived. Through her sly wit and humor, Robin McLean is luring readers into deeper questions." --Frank Soos "Tonally and structurally, these marvelous stories have no discernable influences. In her debut collection, Robin McLean emerges as a writer with a singular voice and vision. I admire this book immoderately, and I hope that readers will find it." --Chris Bachelder "Robin McLean's fiction is harrowing and wry and compassionate, and always both fiercely rooted in the world and fearlessly willing to take chances. I love her keen sense of our inherent strangeness, and her heartening sense of just how important it is that we never stop trying to close the gap between who are and who we aspire to be. --Jim Shepard "Once you've read these nine stories, forgetting them is as unlikely as discovering the end-point of pi. Kissing cousins to George Saunders, Donald Barthelme, and perhaps even Don DeLillo, they are nonetheless powered by a distinctive new voice. McLean dives fearlessly through the Looking Glass; she scrubs the psyche raw, perhaps in an effort to get even closer to what constitutes 'reality'." --Jim Story "Robin McLean's debut collection is electric. I recommend that you get a copy and put it at the top of your stack." --Jodi Angel "Reptile House is so wonderful. It's full of (almost) unbearable tension and what a wild ride through so many worlds. I enjoyed reading it hugely and am recommending it to all my reading/writing friends." --Kathy Anderson "When you read Robin McLean's stories, she's gonna get you. She will take you out into deep, and then deeper, water." --Noy Holland "I haven't read a book this dark and frank and sublimely written in a while. Maybe since Cormac McCarthy's No Country for Old Men." --Alden Jones
ISBN: 9781938160653
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 226g
216 pages